There are several interesting medals that come up from time to time which were not produced by the central government of South Korea. I plan to highlight some of those medals here.
Please bear with me, this page is a work in progress.
Martyred Youth Medal
After the liberation of Korea from Japan, there were fierce power struggles between left-wing, pro-communist elements and the right-wing pro-democracy idealists. Power struggles also existed within the two different ideological camps of left and right. At that time, youth organizations such as the Korea Independence Youth Group 대한독립청년단, the Liberation Youth Association 광복청년회, the Seobuk Youth Association 서북청년회, the Seocheong 서청 (西靑: Northwest Youth Association founded Nov. 30, 1946), the Minjok Youth Group 민족청년단, the Tae Dong Youth Group 대동청년단 (大同靑年團), the National Salvation Youth League 구국청년총연맹을 and the Young Chosŏn General Alliance 청년조선 총동맹 were formed. The Tae Dong Youth League, founded Sept. 21, 1947, was formed around Kim Gu’s 김구 (金九) supporters, while the organizations supporting Syngman Rhee founded the National Salvation Youth League on February 5, 1948. Right-wing youth organizations, which received strong support from the US military police at the time, wielded unbridled power, especially after 1946. However, not all right-wing youth organizations received cooperation and protection from the US military government. The Korean Police supplied the weapons.
After the establishment of South Korea on Aug. 15, 1948, Syngman Rhee needed to secure his support / power base. He organized a new unified youth movement group, the Tae Han Youth Corps 대한청년단 (大韓靑年團). This youth group is also known as Hancheong 한청(韓靑). It was established on Dec. 19, 1948 and was a quasi-national organization with Syngman Rhee as its president. After Kim Gu’s assassination in 1949, the Tae Dong Youth League, along with several other youth organizations, were integrated and absorbed by the Tae Han Youth League, under orders from Syngman Rhee, the president of South Korea. Even so, some elements of the original organization continued to act independently, so it is not possible to get an accurate date for its complete disbandment.
In 1949, after most of the U.S. Army had withdrawn from Korea, the Tae Han Youth Corps was reorganized into the Youth Defense Corps and used as a reserve military organization. Later, during the Korean War, the Youth National Guard became the basis for the creation of the Korean National Guard. During the Korean War, youth organizations cooperated with, and served in, military and police operations. Syngman Rhee disbanded his Tae Han Youth Corps on Sept. 10, 1953, after the Korean War.
On December 23, 1962, almost 10 years after the disbandment, 18 people who had been members of the Tae Han Youth Corps gathered to discuss the future possibility of creating an organization and holding memorial services. On Oct. 10, 1963, some 2,118 representatives of youth activists from across the country gathered at the Seoul Civic Center Auditorium. They created an organization using the name Cheongwoohoe 청우회 (晴雨會). At that time, it was a social organization registered with the Ministry of Culture and Information. Its purpose was to remember and commemorate the history of the Youth Movement in the anti-communist struggle and those who had perished in that struggle. The following day, the Martyred Youth Medal was produced. In 1975, the name of the organization was changed to the Korea Youth Movement Association 한국청년운동협의회. It was renamed the Founding Youth Movement Council 건국청년운동협의회 in 1987. And later, in 1995, the organization was renamed to the National Assembly of the Republic of Korea 대한민국건국회. The organization obtained a corporation license from the Public Information Agency In 1997. Later, in February 2017, the name was changed to “National Association for National Unification of Korea” 대한민국통일건국회, and in November 2017, it was approved as a non-profit corporation by the Ministry of Public Administration and Security and continues until now. They maintain a website at http://www.ucgeonguk.co.kr/.
There is a “Monument to the Martyrs of the Anti-Communist Youth Movement” 반공 청년운동 순국 열사 기념비 located on Namsan (남산 South Mountain) in Seoul. It is just across from the cable car platform near Sowol-gil 소월길, and somewhat separated from the normal tourist attractions. The memorial honors the 17,274 anti-communist youths who died fighting against communist leftists. This number does not include those youths who were members of the military or police forces. The groundbreaking ceremony was held on June 6, 1968, and the memorial was completed on June 25, 1969. The monument was funded by donations from President Park Chung-hee, Korean Politician and businessman Kim Seong-gon 김성곤 (金成坤·1913~1975) and others. In 1975, the 1st Anti-Communist Youth Movement Joint Memorial Ceremony 제1회 반공청년운동 순국자 합동추념제 was held. These ceremonies continue to be held every June, in front of the monument.
In doing the research for this article, the name of the organization “Cheong Woo Hoe” gave me no end of problems. There was virtually nothing on the internet when searching for “Cheong Woo Hoe” in English or in Korean. These searches did bring up lots of youth organizations, but nothing to tie it to the medal featured with this article. It wasn’t until I started searching for information using the Chinese characters, 晴雨會, that I was able to connect the dots. The pickings were still slim, but better. The name “Cheong Woo” means “Rain or Shine”. It should be thought of in the same manner as the unofficial motto of the U.S. Post Office, “Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds”. So, the name of the organization that issued the medal is technically the “Rain (or) Shine Association”.
The Bank of Korea
In 1910, the Governor-General of Korea established the Hankuk Bank 한국은행 (韓國銀行), taking the place of the privately held Korean branch of (Japanese) Daiichi Kokuritsu Ginkō 株式会社第一銀行 (First National Bank), which in 1878 had established a branch facility in Korea. The Hankuk Bank assumed responsibility for the banknotes issued by the Dai-Ichi Bank that were still in circulation (approx. 12,000,000 yen). After the annexation of the Korean Empire by Japan in 1910, the bank was reorganized and its name was changed to Bank of Chosŏn 조선은행 (朝鮮銀行) which reflected the official Japanese name for Korea. The Bank of Chosŏn was the central bank of Colonial Korea, and (later) of South Korea. The bank was a privately held corporation with stock owned by a number of Japanese banks and companies; however, its board was appointed by the Governor-General of Korea. The bank was responsible for issuing currency in Korea, regulating domestic prices, and the servicing of international trade. It had branch offices in Manchukuo, China, London, New York City and in Japan. The bank issued Korean yen (¥) from 1910 to 1945 and won (₩) from 1945 to 1950. The bank was dissolved in 1950 and replaced by the newly formed Bank of Korea 한국은행 (韓國銀行). The Bank of Korea is the central bank of the Republic of Korea and issuer of Korean won (₩). It was established on 12 June 1950 in Seoul, South Korea. The bank’s primary responsibility is price stability.
The All-Korean Student’s Association
A few quick words about the Korean inscription. The Chinese characters, at the bottom of the reverse, can be interpreted in several ways, such as ‘National Federation of Students’, ‘All-Country Student Council’, ‘All-Country Student Association’, etc. Since this was a wholly Korean association, rendering the translation as the ‘All Korean Student’s Association’ is not an issue.
The Moscow Trilateral Conference 모스크바 삼상 회의, also known as the Moscow Conference of Foreign Ministers, or the Interim Meeting of Foreign Ministers, was held from Dec. 16th to the 25th of 1945. It was a meeting of three countries: the United States, the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union and was primarily an extension of three earlier Allied World War II Conferences (Cairo 1943, Yalta 1945 and Potsdam 1945). The meeting centered on seven agenda items, which included establishing peace and other Far Eastern issues. One of the agenda items was the trusteeship issue regarding the Korean Peninsula. After the meeting, a Joint Declaration was officially issued on Dec. 27th. It was publicized in Korea on December 28. The sections concerning Korea consisted of four paragraphs. The third paragraph called for the establishment of a Joint Commission, under the control of a four-power trusteeship (China, Great Britain, Soviet Union and the United States). The Joint Declaration included a statement that the trusteeship may be needed for up to five years before Korea could attain national independence. Initially, both sides of the Korean political spectrum, left and right, opposed this trusteeship plan. Many Koreans felt that the plan made their country a vassal of the four powers. In time, it was found that the United States and the Soviet Union interpreted the meaning of trusteeship differently. They both approached it as a means to establish a Korean government friendly to their respective countries.
The All-Korean Student’s Association 전국학생총련회 (全國學生總聯盟) was formed on July 31, 1946, shortly after the Moscow Trilateral Conference. They actively demonstrated against the trusteeship. On January 3, 1946, the Communist Party, which had initially been opposed to the trusteeship, reversed its position and issued a statement supporting it. Korea’s leftist student movement moved in perfect lock-step with the commands of the Communist Party, and so, they too, reversed their position and now supported the trusteeship. This shift of the left led to intensified confrontations between the left and right student organizations. Keep in mind, that right and left wing organizations existed throughout the whole of the Korean peninsula. Student representatives from right-wing groups, such as, the Independent Student Front 독립 학생 전선, the International Student Alliance 유학생 동맹, the Gyeongseong University Alumni Association 경성 대학 동지회, and the National High School Student Federation 전국 고등학생 연맹, held several meetings in Namsan-dong, Seoul to reflect on the current situation and to promote a more effective student movement. From these meetings, it was decided to disband all existing organizations and form a single collective body. According to this resolution, on July 31, 1947, the National Student Federation 전국 학생 총연맹 was formed at the Central Chapel in Insa-dong, Seoul. When representatives of the youth student group were arrested, Kim Gu and Jo So-ang called the Metropolitan Police Agency Commissioner Jang Taek-sang and had the youth group members released. Funds for these organizations were provided by Kim Seong-su.
Then, in January 1949, after the establishment of the Republic of Korea, ‘Guidelines for Organizing Student Protection Corps’ 학도호국단조직요령 were promulgated. The organization of the country’s secondary schools was completed in February, and universities followed suit during March and April. The National Student Federation ended with the establishment of the Korean Student Protectorate Corps 대한학도호국단 on April 22, 1949. At the same time, the Secretariat of the National Student Protection Corps was established within the Ministry of Education, and in September of the same year, the ‘Regulations of the Korean Student Protection Corps’ 대한민국학도호국단규정 were promulgated by presidential decree. The Student Defense Corps was not only organized by central and local regions, but was also organized nationwide, with students and faculty members from secondary schools through universities as members.
Welcome, Apollo Astronauts
After the Apollo 11 returned safely to earth, the three Astronauts: Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins went on a worldwide publicity tour. This medal was used in Seoul during that tour. At the top of the obverse, there is the inscription 환영 meaning ‘Welcome’ with the same word, in English, just below that. Under the Korean and American flags, there is the inscription, 아폴로 우주인방한 ‘Apollo Astronaut Visit’ and below that is ‘Apollo Astronauts’ in English.1 At the very bottom is the date: 1969.11.3.
The Confederation of Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania (CMAAO) 의학협회 연맹
The Chosŏn Medical Association 조선의학협회 was founded in 1947 and organized as a National Medical Association. Immediately after the establishment of the Republic of Korea in 1948, the ‘Chosŏn Medical Association’ was renamed the ‘Korean Medical Association’ 대한의학협회.
Originally, the Confederation of Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania (CMAAO) was called the “Asian Confederation of Medical Associations” but at the 3rd General Assembly meeting, the name was changed to the Confederation of Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania (CMAAO). Since its establishment, the objective of CMAAO activities as stated in its constitution has been to promote academic exchange and cultivate ties of friendship between member medical associations. Another source states that one primary purpose of the association was to contribute to the development of public health services in its member countries, thus playing an important role dedicated to the building of World Peace.
The CMAAO has more than 50 years of history. Its establishment was proposed in 1956 by Dr. Rodolfo P. Gonzalez, then President of the Philippine Medical Association, at the third meeting of the Southeast Asian Medical Confederation. In 1959, CMAAO was inaugurated with the first General Assembly and the first Council Meeting was held at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, Japan. There were 11 National Medical Associations at the time of inauguration, of which 6 were present at the first meeting: Japan, Australia, Burma (now Myanmar), Republic of China (Taiwan), Indonesia, and Philippines. The remaining 5 which could not be present were the Republic of Korea, Iran, Pakistan, Thailand, and India. Korea officially joined the CMAAO on November 8, 1961. In the Congress, Dr. Taro Takemi, then President of the Japanese Medical Association, was appointed as the next President of CMAAO. The official CMAAO Secretariat was established in Manila, Philippines, and the second CMAAO General Assembly was held in Queson, Philippines in 1961. At the 20th CMAAO General Assembly (Thailand, 1997) the offices of Chairperson, Vice-Chairperson, and Treasurer were newly created, and the Secretariat was moved to the Medical Association of Thailand. The Secretariat was subsequently moved to Malaysia (1993), Thailand (1997), New Zealand (1999), and since 2000 it has been in Japan. The CMAAO is currently comprised of 18 National Medical Associations (NMAs), specifically: Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Macau, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, and Thailand.
The 7th meeting of the General Assembly and the 7th meeting of the Council were held at the Chosŏn Hotel in Seoul, Korea from Oct. 13-15, 1971. At that time, the association was composed of 11 members: Australia, Indonesia, Iran, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Myanmar (Burma), Pakistan, Philippines, Taiwan (Republic of China), and Thailand. Also attending were observer nations, namely: Canada, the Federal Republic of Germany, India, Panama, and the United States. The theme of the 7th meeting was “Public Health in Farm Villages”.
There were underlying reasons for Korea to hold the meeting. They wanted to show that significant progress and development in scientific, technical, and industrial fields had been achieved in Korea; this would hopefully contribute to the promotion of trade between the member countries. In addition to the 1971 conference, South Korea has hosted events of the CMAAO IN 1981, 1986, 1990, 1996, and 2005. On Oct. 13, 1971, the Korean Ministry of Communications released a 10 won (₩) postage stamp in commemoration of the event.